Aristotle's practical side : on his psychology, ethics, politics and rhetoric /
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Author / Creator: | Fortenbaugh, William W. |
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Imprint: | Leiden ; Boston : Brill, 2006. |
Description: | 1 online resource (xii, 482 pages). |
Language: | English |
Series: | Philosophia antiqua, 0079-1687 ; v. 101 Philosophia antiqua ; v. 101. |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11226281 |
Table of Contents:
- [Pt.] I. Psychology
- 1. Aristotle's 'Rhetoric' on emotions
- 2. A note on Aspasius, in 'EN' 44.20-21
- 3. On the antecedents of Aristotle's bipartite psychology
- 4. The account of the soul in 'Nicomachean ethics' 1.13
- 5. Bipartition of the soul in 'Nicomachean ethics' 1.7 and 1.13
- 6. Aristotle and Theophrastus on the emotions
- [Pt.] II. Ethics
- 7. Aristotle : emotion and moral virtue
- 8. Aristotle and the questionable mean-dispositions
- 9. Aristotle : animals, emotion and moral virtue
- 10. Aristotle's distinction between moral virtue and practical wisdom
- 11. Ta pros to telos and syllogistic vocabulary in Aristotle's 'Ethics'
- 12. Aristotle's analysis of friendship : function, analogy, resemblance and focal meaning
- 13. Menander's 'Perikeiromene' : misfortune, vehemence and polemon
- [Pt.] III. Politics
- 14. Aristotle on slaves and women
- 15. Aristotle's natural slave
- 16. Aristotle on prior and posterior, correct and mistaken constitutions
- [Pt.] IV. Rhetoric
- 17. Aristotle on persuasion through character
- 18. Aristotle's accounts of persuasion through character
- 19. Benevolentiam conciliare and animos permovere : some remarks on Cicero's 'De oratore' 2.178-216
- 20. Aristotle's platonic attitude toward delivery
- 21. What was included in a peripatetic treatise 'Peri lexeōs'?
- 22. Persuasion through character and the composition of Aristotle's 'Rhetoric'
- 23. On the composition of Aristotle's 'Rhetoric' : arguing the issue, emotional appeal, persuasion through character, and characters tied to age and fortune
- 24. Cicero as a reporter of Aristotelian and Theophrastean rhetorical doctrine.